If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. ** If you are logged in, most ads will not be displayed. **

why running manylinux on the same machine...

guyz..i can't understand y u guyz running many linux on the same machine...what i know is kernel,distro's version and packaging system version differs..oni that....can some one give answer why u run many linux distro's on the same machine...

but basically all linux do the same job.... trying to duak booting 2 linuxes...i can understand....but for fun??? ur wasting ur hard drive space ....

not if you share the same /home and swap partitions, then you're really not losing much space. there are many differences between distros, and you can find out more info about that in other threads in the forums. i can see why someone might run more than one distro at once for several reasons though. let's say someone wants to use a source distro or hard-to-learn distro like slack or gentoo, but isn't completely comfortable moving away from rpms and easy config in distros like fedora, suse, mandrake, etc. that would be one (of many) reasons to dual boot two distros.

I do it because I like playing around with operating systems, that's all.

Me too
The second reason: when u work in an entreprise it's very rare to find one where all the servers are under the same *nix.
Example in my school: a RH8 entreprise for the mail server, HP-UX and SOlaris for NFS, FreeBSD for the web site, I currently install a debian server for the lug...
If u're not capable to switch easily from one distro to an other u're nothing.That's why I found great to have boxes all mine (like slack or Sourcemage) and boxes more professional (like Debian fairly used on the marcket server )

gnux..tht i can understand....izzit possible to use a same partition for distro's??

That depends on th partition. /home/ and swap partitions can be used by multiple distros (I do this myself). Your root partition cannot, obviously, since that's where your distro-specific data is kept.

That depends on th partition. /home/ and swap partitions can be used by multiple distros (I do this myself). Your root partition cannot, obviously, since that's where your distro-specific data is kept.

I did that too
Just a question: do u think it's possible to share a swap partition between FreeBSD and GNU/linux?